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Tories Love Labour’s Loss: Odds Drift After Resignations

The resignations of seven Labour MPs on Monday morning may have damaged the Party’s hopes of winning the next General Election, whenever it may be, however, the odds suggest it is water off a duck’s back for Jeremy Corbyn. The Labour Leader is 1/25 with William Hill to lead his party into the next General Election, however Labour’s odds of bagging victory have drifted.

They are 11/4 from 9/4 to win by a majority while the Conservative’s odds of winning the most seats have been cut from 10/11 to 4/5.

“It would seem as though Jeremy Corbyn will dig his heels in until at least the next General Election however, he needs to get his house in order soon as Labour’s chances of winning power any time soon are drifting with him at the helm,” said William Hill spokesman Joe Crilly.

William Hill can report a move for a second referendum and as a result the price has been cut from 5/2 to 7/4. “The odds of a second referendum have been slashed today and it now looks a real possibility again,” said William Hill spokesman Rupert Adams.

The latest odds from William Hill suggest that Theresa May has not got a cat in hell’s chance of getting the Brexit bill through Parliament on January 15th and it is 1/7 that she loses the vote. Hills have set the spread at 237 votes (10/11 less than, 10/11 238 or more) well short of the 320 required to pass the bill.
“There are only so many times that you can drag yourself off the canvas and things are looking bleak for Theresa May,” said William Hill spokesman Rupert Adams. “The odds suggest she is going to fail by around eighty votes.”
UK Parliament To Approve EU Withdrawal Agreement in January 2019: 1/7 No, 4/1 Yes
January 15th Vote: 10/11 237 or less, 10/11 238 or more
Withdrawal Agreement To Be Approved By UK Parliament Before 30/03/19: 4/11 No, 1/1 Yes
2/1 UK to revoke Article 50 before 29/03/19
UK to have second EU referendum before end of 2020?: 8/15 No, 11/8 Yes
Year Theresa May Leaves Office As PM: 2/7 2019, 9/2 2020, 12/1 2021, 10/1 2022 or later